Journal article

Impact of increasing tobacco taxes on working-age adults: Short-term health gain, health equity and cost savings

CL Cleghorn, T Blakely, G Kvizhinadze, FS Van Der Deen, N Nghiem, LJ Cobiac, N Wilson

Tobacco Control | BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP | Published : 2018

Abstract

Objective The health gains and cost savings from tobacco tax increase peak many decades into the future. Policy-makers may take a shorter-term perspective and be particularly interested in the health of working-age adults (given their role in economic productivity). Therefore, we estimated the impact of tobacco taxes in this population within a 10-year horizon. Methods As per previous modelling work, we used a multistate life table model with 16 tobacco-related diseases in parallel, parameterised with rich national data by sex, age and ethnicity. The intervention modelled was 10% annual increases in tobacco tax from 2011 to 2020 in the New Zealand population (n=4.4 million in 2011). The pers..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Health Research Council of New Zealand


Funding Acknowledgements

The authors are supported by the BODE<SUP>3</SUP> Programme, which is studying the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of various preventive interventions and receives funding support from the Health Research Council of New Zealand (project number 10/248).